Unjust award for condoms

In the past, people kept blaming condoms for reducing pleasure, but recent research has proven that this is a mistake.

A recent study has found that the pleasure of women and men is unaffected by the appearance of condoms (BCS).

Researchers conducted an online survey of the relationship habits of women and men between the ages of 18 and 59. They found that the proportion of participants using condoms when the relationship felt satisfied was equal to the rate. rate of non-users.

Dr Debby Herbenick from the Bloomington School of Public Health, Indiana University, USA said: 'The reason may be because men are the ones who buy and use condoms. However, women should get used to using condoms to enhance safety and bring pleasure in relationships'.

An investigation across the US showed an erection when men's relations were not affected when they wore condoms.

Picture 1 of Unjust award for condoms
Condoms are unjustly solved when researchers point out
it does not lose the pleasure of both sexes when "love".

Dr. Herbenick said the results of the study could send a message about health in the fight against HIV disease and unwanted pregnancy.

'We need to understand how people choose condoms and their effects on safety and pleasure in relationships'.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there are about 19 million new sexually transmitted infections in the United States every year.

Chlamydia is one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases, with 1.3 million cases recorded in the US, 152,828 new cases between the ages of 16 and 24 are recorded in the UK in 2010. People suffering from The disease usually has no symptoms, but if left untreated, the disease can cause many health problems.

Irwin Goldstein, editor of the Journal of Sex Medicine, said the study is a continuation of Alfred Kinsey's research, a sexologist, who founded the Sexual Research Institute at Indiana University in 1947.